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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Paolella is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Paolella.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2013

Colloidal synthesis of cuprite (Cu2O) octahedral nanocrystals and their electrochemical lithiation.

Andrea Paolella; Rosaria Brescia; Mirko Prato; Mauro Povia; Sergio Marras; Luca De Trizio; Andrea Falqui; Liberato Manna; Chandramohan George

We report a facile colloidal route to prepare octahedral-shaped cuprite (Cu2O) nanocrystals (NCs) of ∼40 nm in size that exploits a new reduction pathway, i.e., the controlled reduction of a cupric ion by acetylacetonate directly to cuprite. Detailed structural, morphological, and chemical analyses were carried on the cuprite NCs. We also tested their electrochemical lithiation, using a combination of techniques (cyclic voltammetry, galvanostatic, and impedance spectroscopy), in view of their potential application as anodes for Li ion batteries. Along with these characterizations, the morphological, structural, and chemical analyses (via high-resolution electron microscopy, electron energy loss spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy) of the cycled Cu2O NCs (in the lithiated stage, after ∼50 cycles) demonstrate their partial conversion upon cycling. At this stage, most of the NCs had lost their octahedral shape and had evolved into multidomain particles and were eventually fragmented. Overall, the shape changes (upon cycling) did not appear to be concerted for all the NCs in the sample, suggesting that different subsets of NCs were characterized by different lithiation kinetics. We emphasize that a profound understanding of the lithiation reaction with NCs defined by a specific crystal habit is still essential to optimize nanoscale conversion reactions.


Nano Letters | 2014

Redox centers evolution in phospho-olivine type (LiFe0.5Mn0.5 PO4) nanoplatelets with uniform cation distribution.

Andrea Paolella; Giovanni Bertoni; Enrico Dilena; Sergio Marras; Alberto Ansaldo; Liberato Manna; Chandramohan George

In phospho-olivine type structures with mixed cations (LiM1M2PO4), the octahedral M1 and M2 sites that dictate the degree of intersites order/disorder play a key role in determining their electrochemical redox potentials. In the case of LiFexMn1-xPO4, for example, in micrometer-sized particles synthesized via hydrothermal route, two separate redox centers corresponding to Fe(2+)/Fe(3+) (3.5 V vs Li/Li(+)) and Mn(2+)/Mn(3+) (4.1 V vs Li/Li(+)), due to the collective Mn-O-Fe interactions in the olivine lattice, are commonly observed in the electrochemical measurements. These two redox processes are directly reflected as two distinct peak potentials in cyclic voltammetry (CV) and equivalently as two voltage plateaus in their standard charge/discharge characteristics (in Li ion batteries). On the contrary, we observed a single broad peak in CV from LiFe0.5Mn0.5PO4 platelet-shaped (∼10 nm thick) nanocrystals that we are reporting in this work. Structural and compositional analysis showed that in these nanoplatelets the cations (Fe, Mn) are rather homogeneously distributed in the lattice, which is apparently the reason for a synergetic effect on the redox potentials, in contrast to LiFe0.5Mn0.5PO4 samples obtained via hydrothermal routes. After a typical carbon-coating process in a reducing atmosphere (Ar/H2), these LiFe0.5Mn0.5PO4 nanoplatelets undergo a rearrangement of their cations into Mn-rich and Fe-rich domains. Only after such cation rearrangement (via segregation) in the nanocrystals, the redox processes evolved at two distinct potentials, corresponding to the standard Fe(2+)/Fe(3+) and Mn(2+)/Mn(3+) redox centers. Our experimental findings provide new insight into mixed-cation olivine structures in which the degree of cations mixing in the olivine lattice directly influences the redox potentials, which in turn determine their charge/discharge characteristics.


Nano Letters | 2014

Etched colloidal LiFePO4 nanoplatelets toward high-rate capable Li-ion battery electrodes.

Andrea Paolella; Giovanni Bertoni; Sergio Marras; Enrico Dilena; M. Colombo; Mirko Prato; Andreas Riedinger; Mauro Povia; Alberto Ansaldo; Karim Zaghib; Liberato Manna; Chandramohan George

LiFePO4 has been intensively investigated as a cathode material in Li-ion batteries, as it can in principle enable the development of high power electrodes. LiFePO4, on the other hand, is inherently “plagued” by poor electronic and ionic conductivity. While the problems with low electron conductivity are partially solved by carbon coating and further by doping or by downsizing the active particles to nanoscale dimensions, poor ionic conductivity is still an issue. To develop colloidally synthesized LiFePO4 nanocrystals (NCs) optimized for high rate applications, we propose here a surface treatment of the NCs. The particles as delivered from the synthesis have a surface passivated with long chain organic surfactants, and therefore can be dispersed only in aprotic solvents such as chloroform or toluene. Glucose that is commonly used as carbon source for carbon-coating procedure is not soluble in these solvents, but it can be dissolved in water. In order to make the NCs hydrophilic, we treated them with lithium hexafluorophosphate (LiPF6), which removes the surfactant ligand shell while preserving the structural and morphological properties of the NCs. Only a roughening of the edges of NCs was observed due to a partial etching of their surface. Electrodes prepared from these platelet NCs (after carbon coating) delivered a capacity of ∼155 mAh/g, ∼135 mAh/g, and ∼125 mAh/g, at 1 C, 5 C, and 10 C, respectively, with significant capacity retention and remarkable rate capability. For example, at 61 C (10.3 A/g), a capacity of ∼70 mAh/g was obtained, and at 122 C (20.7 A/g), the capacity was ∼30 mAh/g. The rate capability and the ease of scalability in the preparation of these surface-treated nanoplatelets make them highly suitable as electrodes in Li-ion batteries.


Nano Letters | 2016

Accelerated Removal of Fe-Antisite Defects while Nanosizing Hydrothermal LiFePO4 with Ca2+

Andrea Paolella; Stuart Turner; Giovanni Bertoni; Pierre Hovington; Roxana Flacau; Chad Boyer; Zimin Feng; M. Colombo; Sergio Marras; Mirko Prato; Liberato Manna; Abdelbast Guerfi; George P. Demopoulos; Michel Armand; Karim Zaghib

Based on neutron powder diffraction (NPD) and high angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM), we show that calcium ions help eliminate the Fe-antisite defects by controlling the nucleation and evolution of the LiFePO4 particles during their hydrothermal synthesis. This Ca-regulated formation of LiFePO4 particles has an overwhelming impact on the removal of their iron antisite defects during the subsequent carbon-coating step since (i) almost all the Fe-antisite defects aggregate at the surface of the LiFePO4 crystal when the crystals are small enough and (ii) the concomitant increase of the surface area, which further exposes the Fe-antisite defects. Our results not only justify a low-cost, efficient and reliable hydrothermal synthesis method for LiFePO4 but also provide a promising alternative viewpoint on the mechanism controlling the nanosizing of LiFePO4, which leads to improved electrochemical performances.


Nature Communications | 2017

Light-assisted delithiation of lithium iron phosphate nanocrystals towards photo-rechargeable lithium ion batteries

Andrea Paolella; Cyril Faure; Giovanni Bertoni; Sergio Marras; Abdelbast Guerfi; Ali Darwiche; Pierre Hovington; Basile Commarieu; Zhuoran Wang; Mirko Prato; M. Colombo; Simone Monaco; Wen Zhu; Zimin Feng; Ashok K. Vijh; Chandramohan George; George P. Demopoulos; Michel Armand; Karim Zaghib

Recently, intensive efforts are dedicated to convert and store the solar energy in a single device. Herein, dye-synthesized solar cell technology is combined with lithium-ion materials to investigate light-assisted battery charging. In particular we report the direct photo-oxidation of lithium iron phosphate nanocrystals in the presence of a dye as a hybrid photo-cathode in a two-electrode system, with lithium metal as anode and lithium hexafluorophosphate in carbonate-based electrolyte; a configuration corresponding to lithium ion battery charging. Dye-sensitization generates electron–hole pairs with the holes aiding the delithiation of lithium iron phosphate at the cathode and electrons utilized in the formation of a solid electrolyte interface at the anode via oxygen reduction. Lithium iron phosphate acts effectively as a reversible redox agent for the regeneration of the dye. Our findings provide possibilities in advancing the design principles for photo-rechargeable lithium ion batteries.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Relevance of LiPF6 as Etching Agent of LiMnPO4 Colloidal Nanocrystals for High Rate Performing Li-ion Battery Cathodes.

Lin Chen; Enrico Dilena; Andrea Paolella; Giovanni Bertoni; Alberto Ansaldo; M. Colombo; Sergio Marras; Bruno Scrosati; Liberato Manna; Simone Monaco

LiMnPO4 is an attractive cathode material for the next-generation high power Li-ion batteries, due to its high theoretical specific capacity (170 mA h g–1) and working voltage (4.1 V vs Li+/Li). However, two main drawbacks prevent the practical use of LiMnPO4: its low electronic conductivity and the limited lithium diffusion rate, which are responsible for the poor rate capability of the cathode. The electronic resistance is usually lowered by coating the particles with carbon, while the use of nanosize particles can alleviate the issues associated with poor ionic conductivity. It is therefore of primary importance to develop a synthetic route to LiMnPO4 nanocrystals (NCs) with controlled size and coated with a highly conductive carbon layer. We report here an effective surface etching process (using LiPF6) on colloidally synthesized LiMnPO4 NCs that makes the NCs dispersible in the aqueous glucose solution used as carbon source for the carbon coating step. Also, it is likely that the improved exposure of the NC surface to glucose facilitates the formation of a conductive carbon layer that is in intimate contact with the inorganic core, resulting in a high electronic conductivity of the electrode, as observed by us. The carbon coated etched LiMnPO4-based electrode exhibited a specific capacity of 118 mA h g–1 at 1C, with a stable cycling performance and a capacity retention of 92% after 120 cycles at different C-rates. The delivered capacities were higher than those of electrodes based on not etched carbon coated NCs, which never exceeded 30 mA h g–1. The rate capability here reported for the carbon coated etched LiMnPO4 nanocrystals represents an important result, taking into account that in the electrode formulation 80% wt is made of the active material and the adopted charge protocol is based on reasonable fast charge times.


Nano Letters | 2017

Measuring Spatially Resolved Collective Ionic Transport on Lithium Battery Cathodes Using Atomic Force Microscopy

Aaron Mascaro; Zi Wang; Pierre Hovington; Yoichi Miyahara; Andrea Paolella; Vincent Gariépy; Zimin Feng; Tyler Enright; Connor Aiken; Karim Zaghib; Kirk H. Bevan; Peter Grutter

One of the main challenges in improving fast charging lithium-ion batteries is the development of suitable active materials for cathodes and anodes. Many materials suffer from unacceptable structural changes under high currents and/or low intrinsic conductivities. Experimental measurements are required to optimize these properties, but few techniques are able to spatially resolve ionic transport properties at small length scales. Here we demonstrate an atomic force microscope (AFM)-based technique to measure local ionic transport on LiFePO4 to correlate with the structural and compositional analysis of the same region. By comparing the measured values with density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we demonstrate that Coulomb interactions between ions give rise to a collective activation energy for ionic transport that is dominated by large phase boundary hopping barriers. We successfully measure both the collective activation energy and the smaller single-ion bulk hopping barrier and obtain excellent agreement with values obtained from our DFT calculations.


Chemistry of Materials | 2013

CuInxGa1–xS2 Nanocrystals with Tunable Composition and Band Gap Synthesized via a Phosphine-Free and Scalable Procedure

Enrico Dilena; Yi Xie; Rosaria Brescia; Mirko Prato; Lorenzo Maserati; Roman Krahne; Andrea Paolella; Giovanni Bertoni; Mauro Povia; Iwan Moreels; Liberato Manna


Chemistry of Materials | 2011

Charge Transport and Electrochemical Properties of Colloidal Greigite (Fe3S4) Nanoplatelets

Andrea Paolella; Chandramohan George; Mauro Povia; Yang Zhang; Roman Krahne; Martí Gich; Alessandro Genovese; Andrea Falqui; Maria Longobardi; Pablo Guardia; Teresa Pellegrino; Liberato Manna


Journal of Power Sources | 2016

Transient existence of crystalline lithium disulfide Li2S2 in a lithium-sulfur battery

Andrea Paolella; Wen Zhu; Hugues Marceau; Chi-su Kim; Zimin Feng; Dongqiang Liu; Catherine Gagnon; Julie Trottier; Guerfi Abdelbast; Pierre Hovington; A Vijh; George P. Demopoulos; Michel Armand; Karim Zaghib

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Chandramohan George

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Liberato Manna

Delft University of Technology

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Giovanni Bertoni

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Sergio Marras

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Mirko Prato

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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M. Colombo

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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